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A Gay Purge Looms for the GOP

By Max Blumenthal, TheNation.com. Posted October 13, 2006.


Armed with a list of names of gay Republican staffers in Washington, Christian Right leaders are calling for their exit.
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A Gay Purge Looms for the GOP

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Immediately after the Mark Foley scandal broke, some anti-Republican gay rights activists composed a memo containing the names of closeted gay Republican congressional staffers and sent it to leading Christian Right advocacy groups. The founder and chairman of one of those groups, the Rev. Don Wildmon of the American Family Association, told me he has received that memo, which he referred to simply as "The List." Based on The List's contents, Wildmon is convinced that a secretive gay "clique" boring within the Republican-controlled Congress is responsible for covering up Foley's sexual predation toward teenage male House pages. Moreover, Wildmon calls on the Republican Party leadership to promptly purge the "subversive" gay staffers.






"They oughtta fire every one of 'em," Wildmon told me in his trademark Mississippi drawl. "I don't care if they're heterosexual or homosexual or whatever they are. If you've got that going on, that subverts the will of the people, that subverts the voters. That is subversive activity. There should be no organization among staffers in Washington of that nature, and if they find out that they're there and they're a member, they oughtta be dismissed el pronto."




Wildmon claimed that an investigation by congressional Republican leaders into the gay menace lurking in their midst will clear House Speaker Dennis Hastert of allegations that he repeatedly ignored warnings about Foley's behavior. "I think the identification of the members of the homosexual clique is going to come out," Wildmon declared. "I think it's going to come out whether or not Hastert knew what he says, and at this point I'm inclined to believe he's telling the truth. I'm beginning to think that the homosexuals shielded their former congressman Foley and that Denny Hastert did not know the depth of what's going on up there."





Wildmon's defense of Hastert dovetails loosely with Hastert's own explanation for his actions, or lack thereof. Hastert did nothing after being warned last spring by House majority leader John Boehner and Rep. Tom Reynolds about Foley's explicit exchanges with House pages. Yet during an Oct. 10 press conference, Hastert deflected blame onto his own staffers, who he said may have engaged in a "coverup." (In an interview with the Chicago Tribune, Hastert also blamed his woes on "ABC News and a lot of Democratic operatives, people funded by [liberal billionaire philanthropist] George Soros.")




While Hastert has never suggested his staffers were part of any gay Republican "clique," openly gay Hill staffers who had contact with Hastert's staff and his congressional allies have become subjects of a House Ethics Committee and FBI investigation into Foleygate. One of the gay staffers, Kirk Fordham, former chief of staff to Foley, was serving as Reynolds's chief of staff when the news broke of Foley's activities. Another, Jeff Trandahl, served as House clerk from 1999 to 2005 and oversaw the page program.





Hastert's chief of staff, Scott Palmer, has confirmed he was informed by Fordham of Foley's lurid IMs in 2005. Fordham, however, alleges that Palmer knew of Foley's behavior much earlier than 2005. Trandahl, for his part, was presented with Foley's IMs in 2003 and, together with Illinois Republican Rep. John Shimkus, told Foley to break contact with the teen.





Even though Fordham and Trandahl are key figures in the Foley scandal, the disclosure of their actions does not absolve House Republican leaders of their own roles in keeping Foley's licentious and possibly illegal behavior from the public. Yet Fordham and Trandahl are tempting targets for the gay-obsessed Christian Right. In their desperate effort to stave off a Democratic takeover of Congress and preserve their political agenda, Wildmon and his allies have volunteered as Hastert's surrogates, casting him as the victim of a gay Republican cabal.




Family Research Council president Tony Perkins first laid out the strategy on Oct. 9, writing in FRC's newsletter : "Has the social agenda of the GOP been stalled by homosexual members and or staffers? When we look over events of this Congress, we have to wonder." Perkins continued: "Does the [Republican] party want to represent values voters or Mark Foley and friends?" Though a portrait of Trandahl appeared beside Perkins's missive, Perkins stopped just short of calling for a purge of gay GOP staffers.




Focus on the Family founder James Dobson, a co-founder of the FRC and a close ally of Wildmon, has taken a different tack. During the Oct. 6 broadcast of his radio show, syndicated on more than 3,000 stations worldwide, Dobson dismissed Foley's explicit e-mail exchanges with a former House page as "sort of a joke by the boy and some of the other pages." Dobson then suggested that the liberal media concocted the entire scandal in order to depress turnout by so-called "values voters."





Five days later, Dobson returned to the airwaves to give the liberal media another tongue-lashing. After accusing Media Matters for America and the Huffington Post of "spinning" his earlier comments downplaying the Foley scandal -- "These folks can always be counted on to give the most extreme liberal interpretation of everything," Dobson exclaimed. He recounted an upsetting inquiry from a reporter from the St. Petersburg Times.





"She [the reporter] said, 'I heard late yesterday that Dr. Dobson had asked House leadership to fire all gay staffers,'" Dobson recalled in a voice brimming with indignation. "That's crazy too. That, first of all, would be flat-out illegal. You can't fire people just because somebody says so, and they're certainly not going to do it because James Dobson says so. That's crazy! They're trying to make us look like extremists and people who do ridiculous things, and there's absolutely no basis in this."





With Wildmon brandishing The List and demanding a gay purge, which in Dobson's words would be a "crazy," "flat-out illegal," "ridiculous thing," the chaos and panic among the House leadership has spread to the Christian Right. As Election Day draws nearer, the movement's most influential leaders are markedly off-message, contradicting one another, and on the defensive. And their rhetorical fusillades have made gay Republican House staffers, some about to testify before the Ethics Committee and the FBI, fear for their careers.




Meanwhile, the so-called "values voters," cultivated to propel the Republicans into control of the White House and Congress, appear to have lost the faith. An Oct. 5 poll by the nonpartisan Pew Research Center found that 57 percent of white evangelicals plan to vote for Republican congressional candidates in the midterms -- a 21-point drop in support from 2004. With such a large portion of the GOP's core constituency likely to stay home on Nov. 6, the results could be devastating.




Yet Wildmon remains confident that the Christian Right can somehow snatch victory from the jaws of defeat. "This [scandal] might backfire in that if the 'values voters' see the methodology being used here, that could irritate them more than ever and motivate them to vote," Wildmon assured me. "George Soros and his wrecking crew might have made a tactical mistake."

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Max Blumenthal is a Puffin Foundation writing fellow at the Nation Institute based in Washington, D.C. Read his blog at maxblumenthal.blogspot.com.

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Nothing New
Posted by: NoPCZone on Oct 13, 2006 12:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Closeted Gay Men working in support of narrow minded men who practice, deal in and advocate repression is nothing new. Roy Cohn (Tailgunner Joe's Man) and J 'Edna' Hoover (FBI Director) are but two examples. It must be a very warping thing to live a life that is a denial of your very being and values. That, however, is their problem and not mine.

Since they were more than willing to take their self-hatred and warped world-view out on the most vulnerable people in our country through mean spirited policies that hurt the poor, disabled, working poor and elderly, they deserve what they get. They should be fired. The crime is not being Gay. The crime is being a bunch of lying, self-loathing bastards who take their fear and repression out on our nation.

If they wish to live a homosexual lifestyle, fine. Do it out in the open. By the way, get some counseling. Anybody that deep into the NeoCon racket on the Hill has got some serious issues to deal with.

After you deal with your personal demons and the evil you have done (the NeoCon agenda) you can get back in the game. The G.O.P. will be through with you, but you might find your viewpoint changed out of the closet. The progressives await your rebirth.

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succeed
Posted by: rsaxto on Oct 13, 2006 2:06 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I hope they succeed in purging gay Republican staffers from Washington DC for they can just switch over to the Democrats and provide great intelligence to help the Ds impeach a bunch of crooked Republicans.

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» RE: succeed Posted by: Lauren
Why are these things always minimized at first?
Posted by: justaperson on Oct 13, 2006 3:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It says something about our society as a whole that whenever sexual explotation is first revealed the receivers of this alarming fact always seem to treat it is as petty. It is not petty. This issue has absolutely nothing to do with being gay. It has everything to do with a lack of moral responsibility. A pervert is a pervert and there are plenty of hetrosexual perverts in every community. The idea that hetrosexuals are somehow above seducing vulnerable kids is a joke. I think anyone of any sexual persuasion that hits on minors should always be scrutinized and if found to be actively trying to push them into sexual liasons they should be fired immediately. The fact that the Republicans (of all people) simply slapped Foley's wrists and told him to "knock it off" makes me sick. That's what society has been doing for eons when predators are exposed. The Republicans used words like "naughty" or "suggestive". This just shows their unwillingness to realize that sexual aggressiveness is an intolerable trait in any form. To me they have acted as if they were a bunch of teenagers, not noble men who take their positions in Washington seriously. Foley and the whole bunch who knew anything at all about this should be fired and shamed. To look the other way is to participate in this crime.

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Night Of The Long Knives?
Posted by: martron3000 on Oct 13, 2006 4:04 AM   
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Hmmm...a "purge" within a political party?

Sort of reminds me of another "purge" that once took place in another political party that also involved a homosexual man.
Of course that was back in 1934 in Nazi Germany--that could never happen here.

Or could it?

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» RE: Night Of The Long Knives? Posted by: techphile
» RE: Night Of The Long Knives? Posted by: drmflorida
And round and round we go...
Posted by: Colin on Oct 13, 2006 4:48 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yet another article pointing out the apparent reality that the much loved phrase; 'The land of the Free' is the semantic equivalent to your best outfit - something that is only brought out at Thanksgivings and other special occasions.

Lovely.

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The Coming GOP Purge
Posted by: ptcruiser on Oct 13, 2006 6:03 AM   
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The Republicans initiating their version of the Nazis' Night of the Long Knives was predictable as soon as the Follies of Foley hit the news. Ernst Roehm, the homosexual leader of the Nazi brownshirts or SAs, is reported to have said as he lay dying after being shot, if not on Hitler's orders then certainly with Hitler's knowledge and compliance, "Mein fuhrer, mein fuhrer".

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Gay menace
Posted by: jims713 on Oct 13, 2006 6:13 AM   
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Anything to take the focus off the real problems and divert everyone's attention away from what is really happening. The republicans need to purge the evangelical extremist from their party. They are the subversives here.

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I knew it would come to this.
Posted by: sgtmartin1 on Oct 13, 2006 6:22 AM   
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Had to. The GOP/Bush/fundie cabal is incapable of accepting the responsibility for anything.

Six years in on dubya, North Korea is Clinton's fault. Dubya goes to sleep in Crawford after being warned of Osama's ill intent, Clinton's fault. etc., et al, ... (you get the idea).

When it comes to social issues they are even more reprehensible. Anyone remember when Newt blamed liberals back in the 90’s when a woman drove a car into a lake and drown her kids—later blaming it on some fictitious minority assailant?

Hell, even when they take responsibility they dodge it in the same breath. Hastert: “the buck stops here…but the Democrats did it…”

Which brings this rant full circle. It didn’t take a seer to see that the GOP would get around to blaming the gay community for their little Foley problem. EWM predicted it a week ago:

"…How will Perkins react when he’s handed evidence that there are more gay Republicans in positions of prominence? Perhaps a powerful committee chairman, chiefs of staff, directors of communication. Will Perkins, et al have a change of heart, or will they demand they be fired en masse?

"This has the potential of forcing each and every member of the GOP Caucus to take a stand either in favor of gay rights or paranoiac discrimination. They won’t be able to keep a foot in each camp by posturing behind a constitutional amendment that has virtually no chance of passage. For the GOP, it’s like choosing whether to explode or implode...."
Not all Republicans make good pets.

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» RE: I knew it would come to this. Posted by: mennowoman
Purging gays: Another Republican way of muzzling free-thinking Americans
Posted by: DougScott on Oct 13, 2006 6:27 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Being homosexual is not the issue, folks. The GOP wants gays purged because they won't keep secret incriminating acts by straight Republican politicians.

For damning revelations about Bush and his cabal of treasonous necons, including 70 cartoons and other illustrations, visit the outstanding progressive website -- www.King-George.biz.

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Oxymoron
Posted by: outlander55 on Oct 13, 2006 8:17 AM   
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Gay Republican? That sounds as odd as Jewish Nazi, or Black KKK member. I don't get why any one would want to belong to the party that would deny them equal rights. That is as masocistic (sp) as it gets. Go figure.

As far as purging goes, if they had their way, the pograms would begin immediately with no queer or free thinker left untouched. This is starting to sound like the "Inquisitions" of the middle ages.

This be some serious scary shit y'all.

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» RE: Oxymoron Posted by: meetmeineleusis
» RE: Oxymoron Posted by: vangogh69
Anything that screws up the political system is good!
Posted by: hot_rad_man on Oct 13, 2006 8:43 AM   
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I don't care what it is, let the heads roll and get rid of them all. Politicians are too rich, too corrupted and too plentiful in Washington so get rid of them all, include the Democrats too and when they are all gone, let's ask Hugo Chavez to help us reorganize this messed up country!

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A Spade, a spade
Posted by: kranstar on Oct 13, 2006 8:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Being gay is not the same thing as preying on underage kids. The conservative right has long exercised the delicate use of language in pushing its agenda, and are capitalizing on their latest blunder by pretending to expose the so-called perversions of gay people. The Foley scandal is not a win for the progressive left if we allow them to make an example of the queer community by equating Foley or any other pedofile in congress with us. Foley isn't gay, he said so himself. Call him what he is: a pedofile. And make sure everyone else gets it straight, too, so to speak. For all our sakes.

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not oxymoronic, just moronic
Posted by: anniedine on Oct 13, 2006 9:01 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The vast majority of gay repugs are well-off (or would-be well-off) white men with the same attitude about the poor, the non-white, and women that your basic conservative bigot has. Of course they prefer the company of other well-off white male bigots.

It's a class thing, it's a power thing, and that circle of people consider DC and those halls of power their own private country club – white men with money are ESPECIALLY welcome there, just keep your private life to yourself. The president's regime, both houses of Congress, and the Supreme Court comprise one of the most powerful rich, white boys' clubs imaginable – what gay conservative could resist joining up?

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Purging gays from the Republican party is fine with me...........
Posted by: tap17x on Oct 13, 2006 9:04 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
............so long as straights are purged too.

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» RE: G O P = Gay Or Pervert ? Posted by: AlienSlave
Backmail
Posted by: albrechtkrausse on Oct 13, 2006 10:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Repubs would be better off keeping the homosexuals in the party. This it the way the political Parties, the CIA, the FBI, and other gov't agencies work. They find 'dirt' on someone and then use that as leverage against him. To vote their way, to tow the party line, to spy on someone else, to give up secrets, etc. Old as the hills practice. The NKVA and KGB has special 'ladies' trained to secude married people in the West in attempts to turn them or blackmail them for secrets. The CIA set up special rooms in DC where they filmed prostitutes with targets for use in blackmail and as tests of loyality. Hoover had his 'list' that helped LBJ in particular. Wonder why Mark Warner quit the race? Clintons had dirt on him. You see the only out of this is to seek a system that is not judgemental with regard to sex especially. Homosexuals were especially ripe for this practice since, in most countries until recently, you had to be clandestine in seeking your sexual gratification and it was so taboo. This was the main reason why the intelligence agencies and military were (and some cases still) reluctant to hire them.

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Karl Rove sez: "When life hands you a lemon, make lemonade"
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Oct 13, 2006 11:05 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's always worth trying to get inside the head of Karl Rove - though you'll probably want to take a cleansing shower afterwards.

Karl Rove's main goal is to whip up fervor among the troops - because if only the Rockefeller Republicans came out and voted, all his candidates would lose. Thus, Karl Rove must bring out the Conservative Christian vote in order to win.

His strategy in the Foley cases appears to be this - hang a flaming tire around Foley's neck and throw him out into the middle street with sign on his back that says 'gay'.

Is Foley really gay, or he just a sex-addled maniac who'll screw anything attractive that gets in his path, be it man, woman or beast? It's not suprising that he was finally outed by a Congressional page (way to go!) - as Hunter S. Thompson said when he was covering the Roxanne Pulitzer divorce trial in Palm Beach, Florida:

"Servants are the Achilles' heel of the rich. It's hard to find a maid smart enough to make a bed but too stupid not to wonder why it's full of naked people every morning."

Palm Beach is Foley's district, by the way.

Karl Rove is trying to make lemonade by claiming that Foley's behavior is just an example of typical gay perversity, as if all gays are also pedophiles. Typical Turd Blossom strategy - he also managed to paint Texas governor Ann Richards as a lesbian, which is the central reason Bushie Jr. beame governor of Texas. Painting Foley as the gay victim of a child molester is just part of his strategy.

More than a few people have drawn the connection between Foley, Palm Beach, Roxanne Pultizer and HS Thompson, for example:

http://pomoco.blogspot.com/2006/10/weak-leading-weak.html

"How long, O Moloch, pled Hunter Thompson, who covered, not so long ago, the Roxanne Pulitzer trial from scenic Palm Beach. "There is a lot of wreckage in the fast lane these days," he wrote... "Not even the rich feel safe from it, and people are looking for reasons. The smart say they can't understand it, and the dumb snort cocaine in rich discos and stomp to a feverish beat. Which is heard all over the country, or at least felt. The stomping of the rich is not to be ignored in troubled times. It usually means they are feeling anxious or confused about something, and when the rich feel anxious and confused, they act like wild animals."

Indeed.

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putting the elephant on the table
Posted by: drmflorida on Oct 13, 2006 11:38 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What really makes me uncomfortable is that it was leftist gay rights groups that initiated this purge.

I detest the Log Cabin Republicans because I think they are so desperate to oppress poor people and ethnic minorities that they are willing to oppress themselves. That is the real perversion. Nevertheless, exploiting homophobia for political ends is wrong. Its wrong when they do it, and its wrong when we do it. And we (the left) are doing it, just a little more subtly, by questioning publicly whether the repugs are "still the party of values" since they have gay pedophiles in their midst.

Its hypocritical, and I don't like it.

What motivated Repug leadership to shield Foley like a creepy priest was the lack of ethics. Its the same thing that permits them to cheat in elections, sell influence, and violate the constitution. They are corrupt, and it isn't because they are secretly controlled by a cabal of gays (or jews, or freemasons, or illuminati) it is because of the ethical bankruptcy of their political philosophy.

Conservativism denies the inherent and undeniable value of community and common interests because it gets in the way of profits and self interest. Knowing that any peasant with an ounce of sense can recognize their selfish (and foolish) motivation, they impose an artificial moral imperative (usually religion, but sometimes a flag or other symbol). That is why we have people who are willing to ghetto themselves for a tax break, or to avoid environmental impact fees. Never mind the fact that in a progressive economy, EVERYONE does better. Never mind the fact that with a clean environment EVERYONE is healthier. I need mine now, you can go to hell. A child can comprehend the problem with this, so gay republicans like all republicans do back flips to avoid seeing the obvious. It is not their sexual orientation or skin color or religion that puts them in that awkward position. Its their lack of values, or even the awareness that they are not just confined and caged individuals, but part of a community. This action can only seem to make that condition worse.

The people on that purge list are disgusting because they act against their own interests, and the interests of their community. Nevertheless, to mobilize the christian right against them is almost as ugly. To borrow a slogan from the pro-choice movement - if you don't like gay republicans, don't date one (or vote for one).

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"I'm not gay...
Posted by: jmoore on Oct 13, 2006 12:13 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...but my underage male lover is."

Eeek, what next?

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strange
Posted by: hangman on Oct 13, 2006 12:14 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Foley is going after underage people. thats a pedophile. not gay.

maybe all the gay republicans should come out of the closet and pull the plug on the entire Repugnantcan party. Purge the White House of all the Right wing Republicans.
Heck change history and free themselves at the same time.
change it from within by coming out and exposing the whole gang of creeps to the public.
almost sounds like the republicans ship is sinking,
going under once, twice, threes times.....bubble, bubble. Gone.
Not needed, for all the dirty deeds and wars they have pulled on the people. And their attempting to deny the Equal Rights and Freedoms of the minority of minorities(LGBT).
change has to come eventually to balance the system. they can't go on destroying America with their Repugnantcan agenda.

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Purge em all
Posted by: vangogh69 on Oct 13, 2006 12:35 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'd be curious just to find out how many are in the closet in the party, how many masochistic lowlife's have been hiding out. I'm sure it's quite a few. (And is Rove married to a woman? Not that it means he too isn't in the closet.) I'd really have little against gay men who support the republican party if there wasn't that whole gay marriage thing (for I understand that one can be gay and an imperialist, but back to the issue). Maybe if there was a mass purge, all those comfy gays who think everything's just peachy in this country would leave their designer-decorated lofts and get upset about something, like the rest of us (gay and straight) people paying attention.

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» RE: Purge em all Posted by: Basenjis
Check the Research Ladies, Women Just as Violent
Posted by: sofla100 on Oct 13, 2006 1:02 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Recent research on domestic violence now supports that at least 1/3rd is instituted by females in hetrosexual relationships. And the rate is rising. It seems that the "men always commit domestic abuse" argument is falling by the wayside. Next, most child abuse is committed by women, not men. As a supporter of feminism, I have had to confront the reality that women can certainly be as violent as men. We have been sweeping this reality under the rug too long as feminists and I think that has been a big mistake. It has always played into the stereotype that women are docile, and just men are the aggressive ones. As for sexual predators, it does seem that more men are arrested then women, that is for sure. But, more research needs to be done on this. As society changes and socialization factors change, we might see what has happened with domestic violence. What women did not do 20 years ago is starting to become the norm, unfortunately.

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bush is a fag.
Posted by: WhatNow? on Oct 13, 2006 3:07 PM   
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and so is cheney. Any chauvanist republican from the heartland or bible belt should know bush is nothing more than a wimpy, spoiled rich, queer, frat boy from Connecticut. Him and cheney have been bonking each other for years. They need to be purged. and don't forget to send their dominatrix condi with her whips and chains packing with them. Where's a good evangelist when you need them?

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Kuo Was Right
Posted by: LeaderofMen on Oct 13, 2006 3:40 PM   
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Kuo's new book 'Tempting Faith' says that evil genuis Rove is quoted as having said: 'They're lunatics'.

Clearly Wildmon is. It's so bizarre that I agree with Dobson. He actually has enough brains to realize that a 'gay purge' is simply illegal. Wildmon, tho, doesn't think so. He actually believes that people can be fired for being who they are.

Oops. He's right, too! In most states in the US, if you work for a privately owned company you CAN be fired for being gay. Just for simply being gay. Nothing else.

Of course, Wildmon is unaware that that kind of purging can't take place in the federal gov't.

Oh, I wish I could be a fly on the wall in these evil Xtian conservative meetings right now. They've finally been notified that the party they love so much - that they love almost as much as they love Jebus - is FILLED to the brim with gay people. It's refreshing to hear the sharp intakes of breath at the surprise. Oh my, gays in the Republican party? Say it isn't so.

And I hope every one of those closeted gay men and women ARE purged from the party - IF they are hypocrites. If they're the ones who loudly proclaim their disdain for their own. A purge of those who support DOMA, Don't Ask, Don't Tell and that vile Constitutional Amendment.

Purge all the hypocrites. Expose them all. Show those evil vile Xtian hypocrites what's REALLY going on in this country. Show them REALITY. They hate reality with a passion.

Slugs with salt on them. Writhing in pain. Finding out the truth of the Party of God.

BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!!

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Gay purge?
Posted by: willymack on Oct 13, 2006 3:52 PM   
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Let's get rid of the religious right loonies, instead.

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» RE: Gay purge? Posted by: hangman
new lines in sand
Posted by: cold2touch on Oct 13, 2006 4:30 PM   
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Rove offended Christian loonies by calling them boors and morons and whatnot and for the first time ever, I agree with him.
Additionally, he may be gay, so they will gang up on him big time.
If so, come under the Dem tent, Karl, we need an evil genius of our own.
To paraphrase Mohamad Ali: "I ain't got no quarrel with them gays".
Leave the bespittled fundamentalists thrashing and squirming on the floor of their megachurches to GOP; they deserve each other.

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I can't wait until the list hits the Internet.
Posted by: medstudgeek on Oct 13, 2006 7:14 PM   
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It's only a matter of time.

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So, once in a while, hypocrisy catches up with the hypocrite?
Posted by: Sojourner on Oct 13, 2006 10:03 PM   
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Bush and his buddies (I assume some Repubs find him as insufferable a clown as everyone left of Trent Lott does) have bullied their critics whenever their lies and machinations are revealed. But "You can fool some of the people and then some of the people make a fool of you" to paraphrase Bush.

They have been stumblebums as long as they've had control of the country. Only now it's gotten so obvious, the familiar pattern of blaming others stands out like a sore thumb.

Big deal. The question is, whatcha gonna do about it? For too long now, it's been something's gotta give. Will those with the power to stop the idiot use their power? They've always had the power. When will they add some will to that power?

I'm not holding my breath.

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Thoughtful in Decatur
Posted by: schuthm on Oct 14, 2006 9:39 AM   
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Reverend Wildmon - me thinks the lady doth protest too much! All of this gay bashing by the Christian consertives, protesting outside military funerals and the like - is it REALLY necessary? Wouldn't their energies be better spent in being good Christians and living a good life of example, rather than demonizing others who are not just like themselves?
When are the good church-going folks going to demand their churchs back and get tired of the bully pulpit? It would seem that a person comfortable with their own faith and their own relationship with God wouldn't need to hear the screed these men are spewing forth. History shows us the more someone yells foul the more you ned to look under the covers and see what they are hiding.
Grow up Rev Wildmon.

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Duh, why didn't they know earlier
Posted by: bookwoman on Oct 14, 2006 10:40 AM   
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If the Christian Right is so observant, why didn't they know that these closet Homosexuals were on White House and Congressional Staffs. They seem to ignore these things until you know what hits the wall. They are so narrow and blinded by their own biases, that they don't want to admit the truth.

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Duh, why didn't they know earlier
Posted by: bookwoman on Oct 14, 2006 10:40 AM   
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If the Christian Right is so observant, why didn't they know that these closet Homosexuals were on White House and Congressional Staffs. They seem to ignore these things until you know what hits the wall. They are so narrow and blinded by their own biases, that they don't want to admit the truth.

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Dennis Hastert
Posted by: albrechtkrausse on Oct 14, 2006 12:58 PM   
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Dennis Hastert lives with his aide. It is alledged that when his wife visits Washington that she usually stays in a hotel. I'm not casting aspersions but its pretty weird that a guy as old and as rich would live with another guy. www.capitolhillblue.com/content/2006/10/dennis_hasterts.html

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Among some of the more sane comments
Posted by: Basenjis on Oct 14, 2006 1:07 PM   
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posted today are quite a few that come perilously close to gay-bashing--of hypocritic republican gays, that is--those that some would like to see ripped from their comfortable hidey holes and drawn and quartered in public along with the evil religious right. I enjoy reading alternet articles and comments very much. I've read many wonderfully wise and insightful comments, but I am concerned that so many who seem to think of themselves as supportive of progressive ideals get so violently emotional and overwrought in their comments. I am not a church-going person myself and I'm really turned off by unctious, self-serving popular evangelists, but I happen to knw many good, faithful church members who try to live by Christian precepts and who also believe in the rapture, armageddon and all the other malarkey that goes with it. They are not the enemy. They are hard-working Americans who have been seduced by the same deceits that the rest of us deplore. They would never have gotten the ear of the public had they not been used by the crooks and deceivers in power. We have all been victimized and almost paralysed by the events of the last six years. If the naive religious right have their eyes opened by the exposure of their usage and abuse by George Bush and his administration, it may turn out to be a very good thing. In the meantime, we all have a country to reclaim.

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The GOP Scapegoats Gays Yet Again
Posted by: scootmandubious on Oct 15, 2006 2:08 PM   
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Last week I blogged about the GOP's calculated scapegoating and bashing of gays in the aftermath of the Foley scandal.

While I recommend Foley for the Roy Cohn Memorial Award, I question why, if the Foley incident taints all gays, scandals by heterosexual politicians don't reflect badly on all straight people.

I also link to several instances in the media where the press is challenging the tactic. It's about time.

http://scootmandubious.blogspot.com
select
The GOP Scapegoats Gays Yet Again

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Deserve what they get
Posted by: JeffKleist on Oct 16, 2006 6:53 AM   
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A Gay Republican is a Jew for Hitler. If they're actively taking part in the destruction of their own kind, then the only thing they need is jail, regular beatings and mental help. Since conservatives only learn through pain, public floggings are the answer

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